Inequitable care and outcomes experienced by persons with mental illness have long been exacerbated by stigma expressed by clinicians. This commentary discusses a case, considers physical and psychological dimensions of iatrogenic harm to patients for whom inequitable health care is the norm, and suggests how psychological iatrogenic harm can be recognized and addressed by clinicians.Case ST is a 45-year-old woman with a long-standing history of schizophrenia and violence. Occasionally, ST can respond appropriately to clinicians' questions. But she has been hospitalized in several organizations in the city several times for swallowing sharp objects, which require surgical removal, to which ST typically objects with fear and anxiety so great that she must be forcibly anesthetized. She has experienced several episodes of physical, chemical, and legal uses of restraints during her encounters with clinicians. She has not kept posthospitalization follow-up appointments and cannot adhere to prescribed medications without close supervision.Most recently, ST swallowed a pen, underwent an initial surgery to extract the pen, and began recovering steadily until she noticed Dr L, a second-year surgery resident physician, to whom she said, trying to yell, "I never want any more surgery, ever!" Dr L approaches ST and sits with her, explaining that she will need at least one more surgery to check for bowel perforation. ST despairs, "No one cares about what I want. My decisions don't matter and have never mattered." Commentary Individuals with mental illness experience inequitable health care. They may be denied access to health services and left out of care decisions concerning both physical and mental health. 1 This inequity may partially explain why individuals with serious mental illness die 25 years earlier on average than those without serious mental illness. 2 One key driver of inequities in health and health care for individuals with mental illness is